Leading British Jews call for meeting with Guardian editor over Richard Sharp cartoon
Board of British Jews has requested to meet Katharine Viner

The Board of Deputies of British Jews has called for an āurgentā meeting with the editor-in-chief of The Guardian over the use of āantisemitic tropesā in a cartoon about Richard Sharp.
The newspaper removed the drawing by cartoonist Martin Rowson from The Guardian website on Saturday and apologised to the Jewish community and Mr Sharp ā who announced his resignation as BBC chair earlier in the week.
A review found the former Tory donor broke the rules by failing to disclose that he played a role in getting then-PM Boris Johnson an £800,000 loan guarantee.
On Sunday, the Board of Deputies of British Jews wrote in a Twitter statement: āWe have written to The Guardian requesting an urgent meeting with the editor Katharine Viner in regard to yesterdayās shocking cartoon in the paper, which contained antisemitic tropes.
āThis is far from the first time that the paper has crossed the line in terms of highly questionable content connected to the Jewish community.ā
The cartoon was also criticised by the Campaign Against Antisemitismās chief executive, Gideon Falter, who said it came when people who practise Judaism āobserved the Sabbathā and called it a āresignation offenceā for Ms Viner.
Cartoonist Rowson also apologised on his website, saying: āThe cartoon was a failure and on many levels: I offended the wrong people, Sharp wasnāt the main target of the satire.
āI rushed at something without allowing enough time to consider things with the depth and care they require, and thereby letting slip in stupid ambiguities that have ended up appearing to be something I never intended.ā
Mr Sharp was depicted in the drawing with a box marked Goldman Sachs, where he used to work, that contained what appears to be a puppet of the current prime minister Rishi Sunak, an animal that looks like a squid and a CV ā while a Mr Johnson figure sits on money.
Posting on Twitter on Saturday, author David Rich, who has written books about antisemitism, explained animals with tentacles among other ātropesā are used in negative drawings about Jewish people.
He wrote: āYou might argue that outsized facial features and tentacles are common to other topics too, so itās just a cartoon thing.
āExcept where something has a long and familiar antisemitic history, it takes on a different meaning when you apply it to Jews.ā
Former chancellor and ex-health secretary Sajid Javid also wrote on Twitter: āDisappointed to see these tropes in todayās Guardian. Disturbing theme ā or at best, lessons not learned?ā
In a statement, The Guardian said: āAs we said yesterday this cartoon does not meet our editorial standards, and we have decided to remove it from our website.
āThe Guardian apologises to Mr Sharp, to the Jewish community and to anyone offended.ā
āWe have received a small number of complaints about the cartoon. The Guardianās independent readersā editor is considering these and will respond in due course.ā